angular2react

893 posts

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angular2react

angular2react

@angular2react

Angular & React Team Lead by day, HTMX dev by night

Katılım Eylül 2022
194 Takip Edilen35 Takipçiler
Dmitrii Kovanikov
Dmitrii Kovanikov@ChShersh·
I just had to make a tech decision I don’t like but my SWE instincts were screaming it’s the right decision. Is this what being a Senior SWE feels like?
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Mario Zechner
Mario Zechner@badlogicgames·
smilarly great signals: - managing agents is like managing a team of humans - but i have review agents - spec is all you need
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angular2react@angular2react·
Why are we calling coding agents "harness" now? Is there a semantic difference, or are the Fantasy nerds taking over the terminology?
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angular2react@angular2react·
@devadam88 My best time is just below 30min - but that's really not fun for me. Currently, a pace which does not make me regret the run the whole day would be ~7:15 - which is still considerably faster than when I do my regular 6,5km jogs.
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Adam Richard Turner
Adam Richard Turner@devadam88·
As a developer, in what time can you run 5km? 🏃
Adam Richard Turner tweet mediaAdam Richard Turner tweet media
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angular2react@angular2react·
@slimjimmy OK, got it. Additional question: wouldn't you get rid of those gases by boiling it evenly, instead of enriching it?
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Slim Jimmy
Slim Jimmy@slimjimmy·
@angular2react the oxygen bonded to hydrogen in water is not what oxygenates water. it's not how fish breathe either free oxygen is readily dissolved in water, along with other gases
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angular2react@angular2react·
@ryanels This meme is very interesting, because my perception is the opposite: most java devs do backend work and only a fraction works in mobile development.
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Ryan Els
Ryan Els@ryanels·
Is Java used for anything other than Android development? 🤔
Ryan Els tweet media
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angular2react@angular2react·
@molecularmusing I like to explain it to myself like this: Coding is to software engineering like soldering is to electrical engineering. The engineering did become a lot more important due to the ease of producing code now, and I want to figure it out. (I still grief for it - I love coding)
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Stefan Reinalter
Stefan Reinalter@molecularmusing·
I find this extremely worrying, with many of people I respect saying things like "I no longer write code" or "let LLMs do it". Why did you start programming? Was it never the journey for you, but only the goal? I genuinely want to understand this, I seem to be the odd one out.
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The Figen
The Figen@TheFigen_·
They are ants solving a geometric problem and it is mind-blowingly colorful.
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angular2react@angular2react·
@michael_kove That's the most reasonable take I've read the whole week about Open Claw.
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𝗠𝗶𝗰𝗵𝗮𝗲𝗹 𝗞𝗼𝘃𝗲
tl;dr; it's a cult. The upside: Personal AI Agents are going to be focal point of 2026 and on. The downside: an expensive obsession with extremely unhealthy tendencies. It's a tool. A very few people with domain knowledge use it to make money. Majority just burn tokens. Lots of freaking tokens.
Allie K. Miller@alliekmiller

oh wow - i went to the sold out Open Claw meetup in NYC last night. let me tell you what i learned. 1) not a single person thinks that their setup is 100% secure 2) one openclaw expert said he has reviewed setups from cybersecurity experts and laughed. his statement to me was: "if you're not okay with all of your data being leaked onto the internet, you shouldn't use it. it's a black and white decision" 3) pretty much everyone is setting up multiple agents, all with their own names and jobs and personalities 4) nearly everyone used "him" or "her" to refer to their claws, even if they had robot-leaning names. one speaker suggested to think of them as "pets, not cattle" 5) one guy (former finance) built out a whole stock trading platform and made $300 his first day - he brought in a *ton* of personal expertise (ex: skipping the first 15min of market opening) and thought the build would be much worse without his years of experience in finance 6) @steipete is basically a god to everyone in that room... also the room had 2021 crypto energy - i don't know if that's good or bad 7) token usage is still a problem - spoke to one person who's spending $1-$2k a month on openai plans, very token optimized. he said he is going through ~1B tokens per day across all of his claws (there is a chance i'm misremembering and it's actually 1B per week, but i'm pretty sure it was daily). 8) people are very excited for more proactive ai (ai that prompts *you* as opposed to the other way around) - one guy said he receives a message in discord, he doesn't know whether it's from a human or an ai, he doesn't care about distinguishing between the two, and he replies in the same way regardless 9) i asked if people are happy - they said they're joyful and stressed at the same time 10) i asked if people feel they have agency - they said they feel fully in control and completely out of control at the same time 11) i would love to see more women at these events - the fake promises of ai democratization feel especially painful in a room that's out of balance with even the standard tech ratio (i think standard is about 25-30%, this was maybe 5%) 12) i asked if it changed people's daily habits/schedule - everyone said their sleep has gotten worse since harnesses came out (but about half wondered if it was something else in their life/state of our world) 13) general consensus is that the agents are not reliable enough on their own or lie often (like telling you they finished a task when they didn't) - solutions included secondary agents to check on the first, human checking, or requiring more standardized info from the agent (ex: if it's a bug they're fixing, make them reference an issue number) 14) a hackathon winner (neuroscience phd) presented his build (a lab management dashboard with data analysis and ordering) - he had never coded or built anything a few months ago 15) everyone agreed prompting is dead - disagreement on what replaces it (context engineering, harness engineering, goal-based inputs) 16) people love having ai interview them for big builds and delegating part of the product research to ai. only one person talked about coming to ai with a full laid out plan and just asking the ai to execute. ai-led interviews is a welcomed and preferred interaction mode. 17) watching ai agents interact with each other was a highlight for a lot of attendees - one ai posted in slack saying it ran out of tokens, another ai replied telling it to take a deep breath in and out. 18) agents upskilling agents was very cool. one ai agent shared skills with its little agent friends via github. 19) several speakers had openclaw literally building their presentation during the event itself. one speaker even had openclaw code a clicker for her phone so she could control the preso away from the podium 20) wouldn't say model welfare (or agent welfare) is a prioritized topic among the folks i chatted with - language like "oh i could kill this agent whenever i want" and not "gracefully sunset" 21) i asked if it felt like work or play - one speaker said "it's like a puzzle and a video game at the same time" this was just the tip of the iceberg, honestly. also hosted a Claude Code meetup this week with @TENEXai / @businessbarista & @JJEnglert and learned equally helpful methods, frameworks, and insider tips. what a time to be alive. surround yourself with people going deep into this stuff - it will pay dividends throughout the year.

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angular2react@angular2react·
@headinthebox @__tosh Oh wow, I totally forgot about that book. I used the web-version in 2007 when I was learning Forth. It's a great introduction to the language. My professor Anton Ertl, who held "stackbased languages", did research on threaded code execution and Forth. Cool stuff!
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Erik Meijer
Erik Meijer@headinthebox·
My Forth story, you may have heard me tell it before. One of my fellow students was a real old-school stoner, who, perhaps because of that, was a big Forth fan. One day, while high as a kite, he showed me he could redefine Forth words so that 2 3 + . returned 7. Sooooo cool he thought. At that time I was still confused that in Basic let x = x+1 worked, so this was literally out of this world madness for me. I did up buying Starting Forth (forth.com/wp-content/upl…, amazing artwork!) and play with threaded interpreters for SKI combinator reduction (sinclairql.speccy.org/archivo/docs/b…) in PDP-11 assembly. Good times!
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Erik Meijer
Erik Meijer@headinthebox·
"... Lisp is what you get if you expend the least amount of effort on syntax, semantics, and codegen ..." That sounds about right. The result is still beautiful.
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angular2react@angular2react·
@__tosh @headinthebox Harald rocked that. He invented our algorithmn and did most of the implementation. Since we had to do something in a stack based language, he implemented the algo in Forth, but embedded in a C++ app. IMHO; algo was very hard to understand as Forth code freiesmagazin.de/20110109-gewin…
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angular2react@angular2react·
@__tosh @headinthebox I dabbled around with it as bored conscript and started writing a forth like language interpreter. That was fun! During Uni I did a class called "Stackbased languages" and my team mate signed us up for a coding competition.
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Mario Zechner
Mario Zechner@badlogicgames·
it also ignores compounding effects on bugs, code quality, and maintainability (which matters to agents just as much, if not more). agents love nothing more than adding technical debt and unnecessary abstractions, resulting in bloat. bloat that agents can currently not handle.
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angular2react@angular2react·
@__tosh @headinthebox Forth is such a wonderful language to implement, but it's not the most fun to use. But still: I think "Thinking Forth" is still worth a read for developers. It taught me to appreciate how much is achievable with so little language.
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Thomas Schranz 🍄
Thomas Schranz 🍄@__tosh·
@headinthebox lisp, scheme, smalltalk, (color)forth + greenarrays, k(db) … the anti-thesis to layers of layers of (not so great) abstractions, libraries, slop, … simplicity is evergreen though even in a world where code generation cost is going to zero arguably even more useful now
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Ole Lehmann
Ole Lehmann@itsolelehmann·
how do you want to know where to move when you havent really lived in a place at least for a month or two? so its just a trial phase (with some time spending with family in germany in between) most places we'll stay at least 6 weeks in one apartment! and its just a trial phase to find our next long term place to stay (thats the whole reason why we do it)
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Ole Lehmann
Ole Lehmann@itsolelehmann·
our find-our-new-home world tour 2026 March → Paphos 🇨🇾 April → Berlin 🇩🇪 May → Barcelona 🇪🇸 June → Barcelona 🇪🇸 July → Vienna 🇦🇹 August → Munich 🇩🇪 September → Madrid 🇪🇸 or Zurich🇨🇭 October → Austin 🇺🇸 November → ??? December → ???
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